ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    June
    28,
    1971
    CHICAGO-DUBUQUE FOUNDRY CORP.
    v.
    )
    #71—130
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    Opinion of the Board
    (by Mr.
    Currie):
    In 1967 the Air Pollution Control Board adopted emission
    standards
    for particulate air contaminants
    In 1971 the Chicago-
    Dubuque Foundry Corp., having installed no equipment to meet the
    1967 standards, petitions
    for permission
    to do nothing about its
    emissions
    for another year on the ground that
    the federal govern-
    ment
    is in
    the process of adopting ambient air quality standards
    that allegedly might make any device that might be installed ob-
    solete.
    We dismiss the petition on the ground that even if all the
    allegations were proved no variance could be granted.
    No purpose
    save further delay would be served by
    a hearing on
    the present
    petition.
    In the first place no explanation
    is offered for the extreme
    tardiness of the company in complying with the 1967 regulation.
    We have held that
    a petitioner cannot qualify for
    a variance
    simply by defaulting on its obligations;
    any hardship in such a
    case
    is self-inflicted.
    Moreover,
    there
    is
    no
    adequate
    allegation
    with respect to the issue of the harm
    that
    a variance grant
    would inflict on the community,
    an essential element of the
    petitioner~s case.
    Decatur Sanitary District v,
    EPA, *71-37
    (March
    17,
    1971).
    If these were
    the only problems, we might schedule
    a hearing
    and direct an amendment
    to the petition in order
    to promote rapid
    resolution
    of the
    case.
    But there
    is
    a more serious deficiency
    here.
    The petitioner~scase
    is based upon the wholly unacceptable
    premise that all progress toward reducing pollution must come to
    a screeching halt whenever any government attempts to reassess
    the adequacy of the present standards.
    It would
    be
    one thing
    to permit extra time
    to complete control program that had to be
    revised in midstream to conform with tightened regulations.
    But
    we could not conceivably
    grant an open—ended exemption
    from the
    present lonc-standing rules, without even
    so
    much as
    a program
    for achievinp compliance, merely because of the possibility that
    the federal agency might
    some day require still better controls.
    Not only is the company~sclaim predicated upon an untenable
    thesis, but
    the factual premises of its argument are unsound.
    The
    petition alleges that the adoption of national air-quality standards
    is
    a thing of
    the
    uncertain
    future, when
    in fact the standards
    2—65

    were adopted April
    30,
    1971.
    36 F,R,SI8~These standards,
    it should
    be said,
    do not directly limit emissions
    from individual plants;
    they prescribe maximum permissible concentrations in the air as
    a
    whole.
    The federal government has no direct authority to
    prescribe emission limits.
    The States are to do that,
    subject
    to federal
    review.
    Federal thoughts on the matter of emission limits
    are indicated by the model regulations published as
    a guide to
    the States in developing implementation plans
    to achieve compliance
    with the air-quality standards,
    36F.
    R.
    6680,
    7971.
    Anyone
    worried about federally influenced regulations would appear
    quite safe in designing to meet the model federal regulations.
    But we may very well tighten those limits ourselves.
    We
    have so proposed for the Chicago and St.
    Louis areas
    (*#R71-4,
    R7l-8)
    and may well do
    so statewide.
    The testimony
    is that the
    proposed new standard can be met on
    a foundry cupola with a
    scrubber of 98
    efficiency, which is clearly available and
    in
    common use
    (Transcript,
    ##R70-l5
    and R7l-4, pp.79—~0. An in-
    telligent
    foundry owner with no control equipment would install
    such
    a scrubber as soon
    as is physically possible in an effort
    to avoid both
    a shutdown
    for violating the present law and the
    risk of being required tQ rebuild within
    a very short time.
    The
    likelihood that a more stringent emission regulation than that
    proposed for Chicago will be adopted by anybody for East Dubuque
    is remote indeed and does not justify further delay.
    The petition is dismissed.
    The company would be well advised
    to file an amended petition
    at once embodying
    a firm program for
    complying with the regulations in the ubortest possible
    time.
    The question whether by
    its delay the company has used up its
    time
    to pollute while correcting
    the problem will be the principal
    issue, together with the question of money penalties
    for the delay
    unless it can be satisfactorily explained.
    A complaint by
    the
    Agency would also appear to be called for.
    I,
    Regina E.
    Ryan,
    Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
    certify
    that the board adopted the above
    Opinio~this 28 day of June,
    1971.
    2—86

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